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Biographies
If you have other historical biographies you would like
to contribute that are about former Lawrence County residents please
E-mail me and I will get
them on the site or you can post them to the Lawrence
County Message Board
Biographies with links to Lawrence County
BASS, Samuel (1851-1878)
A
Hoosier In Texas Folklore

BOTTORFF,
Dean M.

BRINEGAR, Ivan H. (1919-1990)
Ivan of Bedford, Lawrence County, Ind. Mayor of Bedford, Ind., 1954.
There is an award presented each year to an Indiana municipal employee
in recognition of distinguished service to his or her profession and
community named the Ivan H. Brinegar Municipal Management Award This
award is named for the late Ivan Brinegar.

BURKE, Charles
Charles of Bedford, Lawrence County, Ind. Democrat. Alternate delegate
to Democratic National Convention from Indiana, 1956.

BURTON, Joseph Ralph(1852-1923),
Joseph a Senator from Kansas; born near Mitchell, Lawrence County, Ind.,
November 16, 1852; attended the common schools, Franklin (Ind.) College,
and DePauw University at Greencastle; studied law; was admitted to the
bar in 1875 and commenced practice in Princeton, Ind.; moved to Abilene,
Dickinson County, Kans., in 1878; member, State house of representatives
1882-1886; appointed a member of the World’s Fair Columbian Commission
at Chicago in 1893, representing Kansas; elected as a Republican to
the United States Senate and served from March 4, 1901, until June 4,
1906, when he resigned; chairman, Committee on Forest Reservations and
Game Protection (Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth Congresses); returned
to Abilene, Kans., and engaged in the newspaper business; died in Los
Angeles, Calif., February 27, 1923; was cremated and the ashes deposited
in the columbarium of the Los Angeles Crematory Association; ashes removed
in 1928 for burial in Burton family plot in Abilene Cemetery in Abilene,
Kansas. Kansas Senator Joseph Burton, found guilty of taking money to
help a St. Louis company scuttle a U.S. Post Office mail fraud investigation,
avoided Senate action pending his appeal.
On May 21, 1906, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld Burton's conviction,
but ruled that the 1864 law's bar against federal officeholding did
not automatically vacate his Senate seat or require the Senate to expel
him. Only the Senate could determine its members' eligibility for continued
service. Within days Burton resigned to begin a six-month prison term.
From The Standard History of Kansas and Kansans, written and compiled
by William E. Connelley, Secretary of the Kansas State Historical Society,
Topeka. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Company, copyright 1918; transcribed
October, 1997.
Hon. Joseph Ralph Burton. Among the men who have come out of the Hoosier
State to aid Kansas as in its real growth and development, there has
been no finer man nor better citizen than Hon. Joseph Ralph Burton.
Youthful in years as he was in experience when he came to Kansas in
1878, he plunged at once into the heart of affairs and gained ready
recognition from the people. Senator Burton had at that time the ability
to impress others with his reliability; he gained public confidence;
he possessed the power of making people know that his talents were not
merely skin deep but that they were solid, substantial and lasting.
Nearly forty years have passed since he cast his fortunes with the workers
w-ho have constructed the mighty commonwealth of the Sunflower and his
reliability need not now be mentioned, it is so well known, the public
confidence which he gained in his youth has been strengthened and solidified
as the years have passed; his hold upon the people is strong and sure
because of what he has done in their behalf. His record speaks for itself.
Joseph Ralph Burton was born on his father's farm near Mitchell, Lawrence
County, Indiana, November 16, 1852, his parents being Allen C. and Elizabeth
(Holmes) Burton. The Burton family, which is of English origin, was
founded in America about the year 1750. John P. Burton, the great-grandfather
of Joseph R. was a colonel of the Continental line in the war for American
independence, and Hutchinson Burton, a brother of the colonel, was a
member of the Continental Congress from Virginia. William Burton, son
of Col. John P. Burton and grandfather of Joseph Ralph Burton, was born
near Asheville, North Carolina. He was a pioneer settler of Lawrence,
County, Indiana, locating near Mitchell in the year 1830, and subsequently
engaging in farming. A democrat in politics, he was active in the civic
life of the community and served several terms in the Indiana State
Legislature. Allen C. Burton, his son, was born near Lexington, Kentucky,
and went with his parents to Indiana. Like his father he was a farmer.
Originally a Douglas democrat, he became later a Lincoln republican.
Joseph Ralph Burton received his elementary education in the district
schools of his native county. He pursued an academic course of study
at Mitchell Seminary, of which his father was one of the founders, and
which at that time was conducted by a relative, the Rev. Simpson Burton.
He matriculated at Franklin College, at Franklin, Indiana, under the
special tutelage of Lincoln Wayland, the late editor of the National
Baptist, of Philadelphia, and after completing a three-year course entered
De Pauw University, Greencastle, Indiana. While in the university he
paid his own expenses by teaching elocution. Becoming dangerously ill
in the middle of his senior year, he was forced to leave college without
receiving his academic degree.
After leaving De Pauw, Senator Burton read law in the offices of the
celebrated firm of Gordon, Browne & Lamb, of Indianapolis, and was
admitted to the bar in that city in July, 1875, and at once located
for the practice of his profession at Princeton, in the same state.
During the campaign of 1876, before he had cast his first presidential
vote, he made a three-months' speaking campaign for the national ticket
under the auspices of the Republican National Committee, and was on
the electoral ticket. Attracted by the greater opportunities offered
to young men in the West, Senator Burton located at Abilene, Dickinson
County, Kansas, in 1878. There he formed, with John H. Mahan, the law
firm of Mahan & Burton, which soon acquired a large practice Like
most young lawyers, Mr. Burton took an active interest in politics,
and in 1882 had so far advanced in public confidence that he was elected
a member of the Kansas Legislature. With his colleague, the Hon. C.
B. Hoffman, he at once became interested in railway legislation. The
members-elect were called together in a sort of rump session at Abilene
previous to the regular sitting. The call for this caucus of legislators
was signed by C. B. Hoffman, A. P Collins, G. W. Martin and J. R. Burton,
and the efforts of Mr. Burton and his associates resulted in the organization
of the first railway commission in Kansas. He was a member of the house
judiciary committee during his first session in the Legislature. He
was re-elected in the year 1884 and during the session of 1885, as chairman
of the committee on county seats and county lines, had charge of the
making of many new counties in Southeastern Kansas. He was recognized
as the leader of the Kansas House of Representatives. In the year 1886
he was a candidate for the republican nomination for Congress in the
Fifth District, and after a heated campaign, in which Hon. John A. Anderson,
the incumbent, took part, came within two votes of a nomination, a dark
horse, the Hon. A. S. Wilson, really winning. While campaigning for
the republican national ticket in the State of Maine, in the year 1888,
Senator Burton was nominated and elected for his third term in the Legislature.
He was the house leader of his party in the session of 1889 and declined
all committee appointments. He introduced and secured the passage of
an anti-trust bill, which became a law in 1889. What was substantially
a copy of this law was passed by Congress in June, 1890, and has become
well known as the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. The Kansas measure was the
first bill of this kind to become a law in the United States. In a speech
before the republican state convention held at Topeka in the year 1890,
Senator Burton foretold the disastrous overflow that befell the republican
party in the elections of that year. This speech, for a time, made him
unpopular, but after the election his words of warning were remembered.
In 1891 he spoke in a series of joint debates with Senator William A.
Peffer, who had been elected by a combination of populists and democrats.
These debates attracted attention throughout the country and resulted
in Senator Burton's nomination for Congress in the Fifth District the
following year. He made his campaign for Congress in a district with
a majority of more than 9,000 against him, spent five months on the
stump, and was defeated by less than 1,300 votes. Although defeated,
his campaign was the means of restoring his district to the republican
party. In the year 1894 he was a candidate for the United States Senate
and there were some other aspirants against him. He was also opposed
by the republican national committeeman from Kansas and by the entire
regular organization of the party, and was defeated in the party caucus
by one vote, the nomination going to Lucien Baker, a dark horse in the
contest. He was again a contestant for the Senate in 1896, he and the
late Senator John J. Ingalls being the recognized candidates. Senator
Burton defeated Ingalls by a vote of more than seven to one in the caucus
of his party, but the Legislature was carried by the democrats and the
Hon. W. A. Harris was chosen senator. In the campaign of the year 1898,
although a private citizen, Mr. Burton was recognized as the leader
of his party, and largely through his efforts the republicans were restored
to power in Kansas. In the year 1900 Senator Lucien Baker was a candidate
for re-election, but, was easily defeated by Senator Burton, who was
the unanimous choice of the republican caucus. Senator Burton's service
in the United States Senate is chiefly noted for his uncompromising
opposition to the Cuban Bill, which sailed under the name of "Cuban
Reciprocity." In his stand on this measure, which he believed to
be unwise, unjust to the people and .dangerous to the interests of his
state Senator Burton incurred the displeasure of President Theodore
Roosevelt, the organized commercial interests, and especially of the
notorious sugar trust. The enemies he made in the Senate in the defense
of the industries and resources of Kansas, finally caused his retirement
and embarrassed him financially. After his retirement from public life
he returned to Abilene engaged in business, and soon acquired a comfortable
fortune. In the year 1907 he bought the Central Kansas Publishing Company,
of which he and his wife are the controlling owners, and purchased the
Salina Daily Union, which he has since conducted. In this paper Senator
Burton seeks to teach the members of both the great parties the true
principles of democracy as opposed to autocracy, which, as he views
it, has gained a dangerous foothold in the republic. Senator Burton
married, October 10, 1875, Mrs. Carrie Webster, daughter of Dr. E. V.
Mitchell, of New Harmony, Indiana. Mrs. Burton is related to the leading
families of that famous colony immortalized by Lord Byron in "Childe
Harold." The Senator and Mrs. Burton have no children, but havc
generously assisted in the education of several nephews and nieces.
Mrs. Burton is one of thc most brilliant and versatile women in Kansas,
as well as one of the most beloved. She has been a co-worker with her
husband in all his enterprises, as well as in his public life. She enjoys
the distinction of being the only United States senator's wife who has
never had her picture taken. The family became residents of Salina in
April, 1910.
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